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The basis of the three-age system, emphasizing archaeological periods, is the 1819 work of Danish archaeologist Christian J. Thomsen (17881865). He related the classification of artifacts to technology, that is, according the materials in which made (stone, bronze, and iron), thereby defining the Stone Age, the Bronze Age, and the Iron Age. See table below for the Levantine Archaeological Periods based upon the three-age system. Thomsen developed the three-age system as a means for the display of artifacts for the Museum of Northern Antiquities (now the National Museum of Denmark). Thomsen held that the three-age system had chronological significance where stone preceded bronze, and bronze preceded iron. The Law of Association arose from this presumption. The Law of Association is that objects placed in a grave as part of a burial generally consist of things in use at the time of interment. Jens Jacob Asmussen Worsaae (18311835), a later associate of Thomsen succeeded him at the museum. Worsaae, now generally acknowledged as the first true professional archaeologist, field-tested the three-age system and verified the Law of Association. He found that in undisturbed graves that grave goods found together generally consisted of objects in use at the time of interment. Archaeologists quickly recognized the general application of the three-age system to archaeological work. Sir John Lubbock (18341913) later further subdivided the Stone Age into Paleolithic and Neolithic periods. Late in the nineteenth century, the Mesolithic period became recognized. Further refinements have continued to the present day (see table). In geological time, the Paleolithic Period belongs to the Pleistocene Epoch. The Mesolithic Period to the present day is of the Holocene Epoch.
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